"OK, say bye to Daddy, you two," I heard Sandy instruct the kids. Cherubic faces crowded my computer screen as Charlie and Rachel gave air kisses and told me they were looking forward to seeing me when I got home. I traveled enough that Skype visits weren't unusual for them. "It's almost time to go to Grandma and Grandpa's house, so go grab the bags I've packed for you and bring them down to the front door. I'll be down in a minute," my wife finished.
"You're taking them to your folks' place?" I inquired. "Plans for tonight?"
Sandy turned back to her laptop screen as the kids scampered out of the room. "Dani gave notice this afternoon," she informed me with a serious look. "She told Neil she's going to a competitor, and he told her to clean out her desk. They walked her out of the building."
I sat back in my chair. "Wow. I take it this took everyone off guard?"
"Yeah. But still, that's a crappy way to treat her. I mean, if she was going to steal client info or sabotage something, she would have done it before she gave notice, right? She was trying to be professional and leave on good terms," Sandy finished with a frown.
I felt a flash of pride at my wife's loyalty to her friend. "I hear you, babe. But it's not personal, it's just standard risk management practice," I told her.
"Well, she's still really upset. Donovan's out of town and doesn't get back until tomorrow afternoon, so I told her to come stay with me. She apparently put the stuff from her desk into the trunk of her car, and then took a cab to the pub near our place. That's why I asked Mom and Dad to take the kids for tonight - I figure it's not going to be pretty around here," Sandy concluded.
"OK, good plan. At least today's Friday, so you guys won't have to go into work hungover tomorrow," I offered. "Did the guys get the pool ready?" Before I flew out on Monday, I set up an appointment to have our usual service company get our backyard pool opened for the season. Summers are often too short, and I wanted to make sure we were taking full advantage of the early spring we were experiencing this year.
"Yep, they did everything while I was at work on Wednesday. Looks great, I can't wait to get in. Oh, and I had them do the hot tub too - it was getting a little scummy," my wife informed me.
"Fantastic," I answered. Cleaning and maintaining the pool and Jacuzzi were household tasks I could do myself, but I frankly despised the work, and now that we could afford it, it was one of the first chores I contracted out. "I checked the weather, and it looks like the weekend is going to be a good one. I want to spend a bunch of it on the deck with a cold beer in my hand, watching you prance around in your bathing suit," I told my love with a grin.
"You're bad," Sandy scolded me with a smile of her own. Her face dropped suddenly. "I'm not sure I have a suit I can wear. The elastic in the yellow one is shot, and it sags in all the wrong places," she lamented.
"Outstanding! Skinny dipping it is!" I quipped with a clap of my hands.
Sandy giggled. "What time are you back tomorrow?" she asked, quickly changing tracks.
"I'm packed now - the truck should be here in a few minutes. Assuming I make the connections in La Paz and Miami, I should be home before noon," I answered. Red-eye flights sucked, but I preferred the discomfort of traveling through the night to burning waking hours in the air. Besides, I'd learned long ago to sleep just about anywhere at will.
"OK, I'll let you go then. Fly safe, hon," Sandy urged with tinge of reluctance.
"Will do. See you soon. Like the lark, babe," I replied. Sandy grinned again at my longstanding, intimate sign-off, and we disconnected.
I closed my laptop and secured it in my backpack, then did a last quick check of the spartan room for any kit I'd missed packing.
Phone, passport? Check.
I made sure to physically touch the items in my carry-on.
The site visit had gone better than expected, I reflected as I hoisted my bags out the door and on to the steps of the visitors' quarters to await my ride to the airstrip. I'd been worried about the attitude of the mine operations management, about the culture of the local workforce in southern Bolivia, about not speaking Spanish, and about a host of other things before I arrived. None of them had posed a problem, which was an unusual and pleasant surprise. I'd updated Svend by e-mail, and my partner wanted to celebrate when I got back home.
Damn! I forgot to tell Sandy he's coming over Saturday for dinner. Oh well, it's not like he needs an invitation after this many years.
Svend was more of a brother than a colleague, as my wife was well aware.
By the time the SUV arrived and I threw my bags in the back, my mind was already on the report I'd need to write.
***
I sat down in Miami sometime after oh-dark-thirty, weary from the grind of international air travel. I'd long ago learned to conserve energy when traveling long distances by following a set hierarchy: don't run if you can walk, don't walk if you can stand, don't stand if you can sit, and don't sit if you can lie down. These rules had served me well over the years; it was like putting the computer on "standby." I knew I had enough time to make it to the gate for my final leg to YYZ without hurrying, so I visited the head, then loped along without any urgency and fell into an uncomfortable chair on the end of a row in the departure lounge. I peeled open a protein bar and slowly began replenishing my energy. Any flavour the nutritious ingredients provided was masked by a liberal infusion of chocolate because, as I'd learned long ago from a grizzled sergeant-major of my acquaintance, "you don't need to practice being uncomfortable." I switched my phone off airplane mode and began to catch up on the unavoidable backlog of messages we all live with in this hyper-connected world.
After performing triage on my work e-mails - answering those needing immediate attention, flagging those I'd have to deal with when I got home, and deleting all the rest - I eventually let myself check texts from home. Sandy had sent quite a few, and they all seemed to have been generously sprinkled with emoticons. I started scrolling.
*Hey babe, missing you!* with lots of hearts of different colours.
*Can't wait until you get home, lover!* with a few sets of lipstick lip marks.
Hell yeah.
*dani's bad* was the next one, with a martini glass, wine glass, champagne bottle popping, and beer steins clinking together. There was an accompanying selfie, a bit out of focus, with Dani's and Sandy's faces pressed cheek to cheek in laughter. The foreground of the pic was dominated by two half-full glasses of red wine.
OK, they're a little sloshed. At least Dani looks like she's having fun, and not crying about how things ended at work.